James Kim - a belated one year anniversary…

of something you rather not remember.

From Wikipedia:

After spending the 2006 Thanksgiving holiday in Seattle, Washington,
the Kims (James, his wife, and their two daughters, Penelope and Sabine)
set out for their home in San Francisco, California.

On Saturday, November 25, 2006, having left Portland, Oregon on their way to
the Tu Tu Tun Lodge, a resort located near Gold Beach, Oregon,
the Kims missed a turnoff from Interstate 5 to Oregon Route 42, a main route to the Oregon Coast.

Instead of returning to the exit, they consulted a highway map
and picked a secondary route that skirted the Wild Rogue Wilderness,
a remote area of southwestern Oregon.

After encountering heavy snow at high elevation on Bear Camp Road,
they turned, by mistake, onto one of hundreds of unpaved logging trails loosely supervised
by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).

A road gate which was supposed to prevent such mistakes was open
in spite of BLM rules requiring that it be closed.

Media outlets reported that vandals had cut a lock on the gate,
but a subsequent investigation showed that BLM employees had left it open
to avoid trapping local hunters and others who might have ventured past it.

Early on the morning of November 26, the family stopped due to fatigue and bad weather.
As more snow fell around their immobilized station wagon, the Kims kept warm by running its engine.
When the vehicle ran out of gas, they made a campfire of dried wood and magazines.
Later, they burned their car’s tires to signal rescuers.

Search efforts began shortly after November 30, when co-workers of Kim
filed a missing persons report with the San Francisco Police Department.

After investigators learned that the Kims used their credit card at a local restaurant,
search and rescue teams, including local and state police, more than 80 civilian volunteers,
the Oregon Army National Guard and several helicopters hired by Mr. Kim’s father, Spencer Kim,
spent several days looking for the family along area highways and roads, to no avail.

On December 2, James Kim left his family to look for help, wearing tennis shoes, a jacket, and light clothing. He believed the nearest town (Galice) was located four miles away after studying a map with his wife.
He promised his wife to turn back the same day if he failed to find anyone, but he did not return.

Tags: army national guard, bad weather, blm employees, bureau of land management, civilian volunteers, gold beach oregon, kims, san francisco police, search efforts, spencer kim, thanksgiving holiday, tu tu tun lodge, wild rogue wilderness

Related posts

This entry was posted in last year, life, observations and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Both comments and trackbacks are currently closed.